Sunday, April 26, 2026
Yesterday, all roads lead to Pietermaritzburg for the celebration of the renewal of religious vows and the conferral of the Ministries of lectors and Acolytes. All 15 scholastics from all over the Comboni world, having been duly admitted to the renewal of the vows by their respective Major Superiors, today renewed their consecration to God for the mission in front of Fr. John Baptist Keraryo Opargiw – the Provincial Superior of South Africa.

Here are their names and provenance: Karabo April Ts’oona (South Africa), Thomas Eugenio Duku Lumago (South Sudan), Emmanuel Oliha Paskwali (South Sudan), Joseph Mukasa Musiime (Uganda), Osward Atwijukye (Uganda), Cleophas Rutaremwa (Uganda), Frank Bakalu (Uganda), Anaclet Bongele (Uganda), Steven Phiri (Malawi/Zambia), Jacob Msanjama Mwachande (Malawi/Zambia), Gerald Paul Hieronimo ( Malawi/Zambia), Pascal Kpekpe Kossi (Togo), Emile Yawo Tomety (Togo), Luis Omar Tasson Rodriguez (Peru), Alberto Ramos (Mozambique). Meanwhile, Emmanuel, Frank, Steven and Jacob were also installed to the Ministry of Lector and Cleophas, Pascal and Paul to the Ministry of Acolyte.

It was indeed a colourful celebration during which the Comboni community in Pietermaritzburg was joined by some parishioners, friends and Religious from neighbouring communities. All this contributed to the visibility of the Comboni missionaries in this southern tip of the African Continent.

Today’s ceremony was the climax of a very busy week in Pietermaritzburg which saw the canonical and working visits of two Provincial Superiors of Malawi/Zambia and of South Africa. Fr. John Baptist facilitated a day of spiritual recollection on the theme: Our Consecrated Life Today – Challenges and Opportunities and insisted on the beauty and the significance of the Consecrated Life and our identification with it as, per se, a full call to missionary discipleship. He also warned against clericalism in some scholastics who think that religious profession is only transitory and not important as they await the “real deal” – Priestly Ordination. In his homily, he dwelt on what he termed the divine audacity of the missionary mandate: Go to the whole world and proclaim the Good News! – a commission addressed on trust to just a few struggling disciples and us. He also encouraged all the participants to strive to be men of prayer with a deep love for the Word of God and the Eucharist.

The week also saw the Scholasticate Community involved in academic conferences at the St. Joseph’s Theological Institute – Cedara, on interesting topics such as Faith in Action: the Church’s Response to Social Crises in Africa; The Church as a Beacon of Hope – Faith Responses to Violence and Inequality in African Townships; Witchcraft in Africa: a theological imagination of its liberation, and Artificial Intelligence and Faith in Action.

Therefore, this week has indeed been a fruitful celebration of our Comboni charism, consecration to God for the mission and ministeriality in the Church, as well as a profound theological formation.

Fr. John Baptist Keraryo Opargiw, MCCJ
Provincial Superior – RSA